The Day

Scuffling Yankees fall to White Sox

- By MIKE FITZPATRIC­K AP Baseball Writer

New York — Ravaged by injuries, the New York Yankees hardly resemble the 100-win team that set a major league record for homers last year. And even though it's very early in the season, they are frittering away games during a favorable portion of their schedule.

Tim Anderson hit his first career grand slam and Carlos Rodón pitched the Chicago White Sox to a 5-2 victory over the scuffling Yankees on Sunday. New York is 3-6 at home against the Orioles, Tigers and White Sox — all projected also-rans that lost at least 98 games last year.

"It's frustratin­g to lose two out of three to a team that we should probably beat," first baseman Luke Voit said.

"I think a lot of us just need to get out of our heads and go back to playing Yankee baseball the right way."

On deck for New York, a visit from the World Series champion Boston Red Sox in the first meeting this season between the longtime rivals. Both are off to surprising­ly slow starts.

"Anytime a team comes into Yankee Stadium, they're going to give you their A game. We've noticed that," right fielder Aaron Judge said.

"We've just got to make sure we match that every single game. People are coming after us, so we've got to keep the intensity up and just play our game."

José Abreu nearly had a grand slam as well — to almost the same spot in the ballpark — but settled for a sacrifice fly when Judge made a jumping catch in front of the wall. Held to one hit Saturday in a 4-0 loss, Chicago chased Masahiro Tanaka with nobody out in the fifth and won for only the second time in eight games.

Yoan Moncada had three hits and a walk for the White Sox, who stole five bases in the last five innings — several of them unconteste­d. Chicago won two of three to take consecutiv­e series in the Bronx for the first time since 2002-03. Before last August, the White Sox hadn't captured a series at Yankee Stadium since 2005.

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